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TNB: Hot Women Die and Have Sex on Everest

Did you happen to see the latest video featuring Sierra Blair-Coyle? The one where she sprinkles chalk on her Sanuks and bangs them together to produce a cloud, hangs upside down in a climbing gym and boulders out a juggy roof at Priest Draw in Flagstaff, Arizona, wearing booty shorts that say “Roxy” on the waistband? Maybe you’re one of the over 2,000 people who “liked” that video? Or—more interesting to me—maybe you’re one of the many people who were bothered by it and left a derogatory or angry comment?

The second thing that happens when we post vids or pics of beautiful women is that some people get mad. In response to the video of Sierra, Matt Gentile, one of the strongest Flagstaff-area climbers (and recently featured in six photos in the feature on Flagstaff in No. 216) commented: “It's pretty lame that Rock and Ice magazine considers this a good representation of climbers in Northern Arizona, or anywhere for that matter.” Another commenter, Johnny Hart, wrote: “And climbing has become all bikini and makeup, oh yay the new fad.”

What’s interesting to me, as an editor, is the dichotomy expressed here. On one hand, a whole lot of people are clearly very interested in this content. On the other hand, some people consider it “pretty lame.” What should I, as a content manager, take home from this contradictory feedback?

First of all, to state the obvious, by posting this vid on our website, Rock and Ice is not saying that Sierra Blair-Coyle is a role model or good representative of the sport, or that all female climbers should wear booty shorts. We put up content all the time that I don’t personally condone. Take Alex Honnold’s recent solo, for example. Just because we posted the news doesn’t mean we’re encouraging other climbers to climbSendero Luminoso without a rope. But we do try to provide news, photos and videos of all aspects of the sport that we know our readers find interesting.

Because we monitor our website, we have a very good idea of what people like to click on and the results can be neatly summarized: Sex, death and Everest. Any post about hot women, somebody dying (or defying death), or the highest mountain on earth will attract a huge number of impressions. I imagine we’d also get a ton of hits if we could report on a zombie apocalypse, but so far that hasn’t happened. On slow news days, I’ve often wistfully fantasized about the day when we’ll finally land the news story that combines all four: Hot Women Die and Have Sex on Everest. Until then, we’ll just have to make do with what we get.

Because we monitor our website, we have a very good idea of what people like to click on and the results can be neatly summarized: Sex, death and Everest.

It’s also worth noting that the comments on the Blair-Coyle video were almost entirely made up of statements about what the poster felt the video represented, not facts, but opinions brought to the video by the person writing the comment. Take for example Rob Powell’s assertion that Blair-Coyle is: “Just too direct with her approach to gaining the limelight.” Or Melissa Bennett who asks, “How old is this nearly naked girl?” Or Matt Gentile, again, who writes: “I know it's been suggested before, but maybe there really should be a fence built around Phoenix … ” These statements point to an implicit judgment that Blair-Coyle is seeking the limelight, or too young to dress in booty shorts (she’s 20), or that people from Phoenix are somehow inferior to people from Flagstaff. To me, this kind of judgmental Internet slander is more offensive than a 20-year-old woman bouldering around in next to nothing. But that’s just my opinion.

I’d like to point out that 99.9 percent of the news we report, the vids we post, the articles we publish are not about hot women, death or Everest. If you go to the site or pick up the mag you’ll find in-depth coverage of climbing and not much else, and that’s a reflection of our vision. Sure, we could focus more on what generates impressions—but at the end of the day Rock and Ice is produced by climbers and climbing is what we’re stoked on, so that’s what we cover.

How are we doing? I’m interested in hearing your suggestions on content for both rockandice.com and Rock and Ice magazine. If you have ideas about how we can improve our coverage (or comments about hot women, death and/or Everest), please weigh in below.

Reader's Commentary:

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My Name is Luciano Fernandes, and I´m de main editor (like you) from the biggest on-line climbing magazine from Brazil.

With a HUGE coincidence we been on the same situation as you was when publish about the Sierra´s video.

I saw this video when was released, and I though was a little bit silly, and take a option not to publish. As a normal human should behave : If you don´t like, just say “hum”, and move on with your life.

A writer from our website wrote a article about fashion on Climbing and outdoor environment. Was clearly focused on whoever interesting about the subject.

After published was like a rain of rocks on us, accusing of be shallow, and feminist (!!), and the worst dirty word ever.

I did the same as you did : take the word, and protect the writer, because, after all, I am who approve or disapproved the content from the site.

As you told on your brilliant article : we work hard, doing excellent and important subjects, and for somehow people only care about girls, deaths and shallow landmarks on Everest.

We provide 3 articles at day, watch (and pay for every single one, not using torrent) several outdoor movies to do reviews, travel to do equipment reviews, contact professionals to talk about important subject, promote all Brazilian videos, do weekly interviews with people that do something on climbing community. But no, all of this is forget when some subject that a dork don´t like, and feel tuff enough to wrote silly things.

This is a “cutting mood” EVER.

Congratulations of your article again.

Don´t give up.. On the road will always show up this brainless and predigest people. The most important task is Do you job (as you do with high quality) and take a deep breath when this person insists to think the comments area of your site is like a toilet that they can put all is in their head.

If you want a friend to talk about climbing, magazines and stuff, We are always here, and yes, we talk English ;).